Weekly Update: August 6 to 12, 2017

Aug 13, 2017

I got my myreads project completed. I originally submitted it on Monday morning but it was not accepted on the first attempt. My readme.md file did not meet the standards of the rubric so I had to resubmit. The reviewer noted that all of the functionality was there, I just needed to make sure to get the readme.md in order. After updating the file to better meet the requirements the project was accepted. The project review system is well done. Reviewers put in a lot of effort into examining each submission. It’s onto the Redux section for now. I’m going to try to jump on the new content in the same way that I did with the fundamentals section.

Pluralsight added a course I’ve been excitedly anticipating for quite some time. The course I’ve been waiting for was Securing ASP.NET Core with OAuth2 and OpenID Connect. I’ve been waiting for this because I’m interested in using .NET Core to build secure web services. I would like to build many tools using React and React Native on the front end and .NET Core for the backend. I’m going to apply the concepts from the React Nanodegree and the .NET Core content from Pluralsight to create a ton of new tools. I’ve only just started the course, but the material I’ve seen so far has been great. I’m going to take my time through the course and implement each step by hand to maximize the learning process. It’ll probably take two or three weeks of dedicated study to complete it.

On the Next…

I’m on pace to finish up the React and Redux course material early next week. Once I’ve completed it, I will start in earnest on the next project. I’ve created a repo for it the project already, readable, and I’m excited to get started on it. From briefly looking at the project specifications, it looks like I’ll be creating a HackerNews clone using React and Redux.

Another thing I want to dive deeper into in the near future is the Gatsby static site generator. With all the knowledge I’m accumulating about React, it’s fitting that I’d start exploring Gatsby. Currently, dev-eryday is built using Jekyll. I haven’t pushed myself to learn much beyond the basics of that static site generator though. Jekyll is doing its job admirably, but I could make dev-eryday better than it is. Gatsby is a perfect match to take the skills I already have further, and to potentially improve dev-eryday. That’s a huge win.

Dev-eryday

Dev-every is a personal project created by Joshua Niederer to aid in becoming a better software developer. The concept is to develop myself and my skills every day. This site serves to log my efforts and to share knowledge, creations, insights, and whatever else I discover along the way.